One quick thing -- I noticed almost all your verbs are some form of "assist" or "learn." You'll need to change that. I learned once in some resume-writing workshop you really should try not to use the same word twice, even.

I don't think there are too many headings. And it might be my international relations background but I'd definitely move Korean skills up to nearly the very top.

I always tell everyone to shy away from "Relevant Experience" as a possible heading though. It makes it seem like the other experiences aren't relevant. In which case, why would you include them? I've been on some fairly senior interview committees (not admissions committees, mind you) for "real" careers and I've never seen a successful candidate use "Relevant Experience" as a heading.

If what you mean is "Legal Experience," and you're thinking Legal = Relevant, then just say "Legal Experience."

bbsg wrote:I don't think there are too many headings. And it might be my international relations background but I'd definitely move Korean skills up to nearly the very top.

I always tell everyone to shy away from "Relevant Experience" as a possible heading though. It makes it seem like the other experiences aren't relevant. In which case, why would you include them? I've been on some fairly senior interview committees (not admissions committees, mind you) for "real" careers and I've never seen a successful candidate use "Relevant Experience" as a heading.

If what you mean is "Legal Experience," and you're thinking Legal = Relevant, then just say "Legal Experience."

uh..no.

Nobody cares you're bilingual..youre applying to law school, not the state dept foreign service office..besides most applicants are probably bilingual in some way and korean isnt an "exotic" language that the ad comm might be impressed with/interested in.

In regards to the headings, I think its bad advice. 3 headings for things related to experience is 2 too many. 1 experience section, thats it.

Does anyone have any idea about my other question? --> I worked at a law center during fall and spring semesters for about 3 years. Is it okay to just put the first start month/year and the last end month/year without mentioning that I only worked during the months I had school? If I have to mention it, how do you suggest I do it?

jychun412 wrote:Does anyone have any idea about my other question? --> I worked at a law center during fall and spring semesters for about 3 years. Is it okay to just put the first start month/year and the last end month/year without mentioning that I only worked during the months I had school? If I have to mention it, how do you suggest I do it?